1、 IEEE Recommended Practice for Encryption and Management of Electronic Design Intellectual Property (IP) Sponsored by the Design Automation Standards Committee IEEE 3 Park Avenue New York, NY 10016-5997 USA IEEE Computer Society IEEE Std 1735-2014 (Incorporates IEEE Std 1735-2014/Cor 1-2015) IEEE St
2、d 1735-2014(IncorporatesIEEE Std 1735-2014/Cor 1-2015)IEEE Recommended Practice for Encryption and Management of Electronic Design Intellectual Property (IP)SponsorDesign Automation Standards Committeeof theIEEE Computer SocietyApproved 10 December 2014IEEE SA-Standards BoardThe Institute of Electri
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32、ibility. Further information may be obtained from the IEEE Standards Association.viCopyright 2015 IEEE. All rights reserved.ParticipantsIEEE Std 1735-2014The Electronic Design Intellectual Property (IP) Working Group is entity based. At the time this standardwas completed, the Electronic Design Inte
33、llectual Property (IP) Working Group had the followingmembership:Dave Graubart, ChairJoe Daniels, Technical Editor The following members of the entity balloting committee voted on this standard. Balloters may have votedfor approval, disapproval, or abstention. When the IEEE-SA Standards Board approv
34、ed this standard on 10 December 2014, it had the followingmembership:John Kulick, ChairJon Walter Rosdahl, Vice ChairRichard H. Hulett, Past ChairKonstantinos Karachalios, Secretary*Member EmeritusLuis Humberto Rezende BarbosaDave ClemansSteven DovichJeff FoxParminder GillSatyam JaniJarek KaczynskiR
35、ay MartinGael PaulRod PriceAdam ShererJohn ShieldsMichael SmithSourabh TandonRuchi TyagiAccellera Organization, Inc.ALDEC, Inc.Altera CorporationAtrenta Inc.Cadence Design Systems, Inc.Mentor GraphicsSynopsys, Inc.Xilinx Inc.Peter BalmaFarooq BariTed BurseClint ChaplainStephen DukesJean-Phillippe Fa
36、ureGary HoffmanMichael JanezicJeffrey KatzJoseph L. Koepfinger*David J. LawHung LingOleg LogvinovT. W. OlsenGlenn ParsonsRon PetersonAdrian StephensPeter SutherlandYatin TrivediPhil WinstonDon WrightYu YuanviiCopyright 2015 IEEE. All rights reserved.IEEE Std 1735-2014/Cor 1-2015At the time this stan
37、dard was completed, the Electronic Design Intellectual Property (IP) Working Grouphad the following membership:Dave Graubart, ChairJoe Daniels, Technical Editor The following members of the entity balloting committee voted on this standard. Balloters may have votedfor approval, disapproval, or abste
38、ntion. When the IEEE-SA Standards Board approved this standard on 3 September 2015, it had the followingmembership:John D. Kulick, ChairJon Walter Rosdahl, Vice ChairRichard H. Hulett, Past ChairKonstantinos Karachalios, Secretary*Member EmeritusLuis Humberto Rezende BarbosaDave ClemansSteven Dovich
39、Jeff FoxParminder GillSatyam JaniJarek KaczynskiRay MartinGael PaulRod PriceAdam ShererJohn ShieldsMichael SmithSourabh TandonRuchi TyagiAccellera Organization, Inc.ALDEC, Inc.Altera CorporationAtrenta Inc.Cadence Design Systems, Inc.Marvell Semiconductor, Inc.Mentor GraphicsMicron Technology, Inc.S
40、ynopsys, Inc.Xilinx Inc.Masayuki AriyoshiTed BurseStephen DukesJean-Philippe FaureJ. Travis GriffithGary HoffmanMichael Janezic Joseph L. Koepfinger*David J. LawHung LingAndrew MylesT. W. OlsenGlenn ParsonsRonald C. PetersenAnnette D. ReillyStephen J. ShellhammerAdrian P. StephensYatin TrivediPhilli
41、p WinstonDon WrightYu YuanDaidi ZhongviiiCopyright 2015 IEEE. All rights reserved.IntroductionThe purpose of this recommended practice is to provide guidance on protection of electronic designintellectual property (IP). The audience for this standard includes IP producers, IP consumers, vendors ofto
42、ols that process protected IP, and standards development groups for IP specification formats.When the electronic design automation (EDA) industry began creating standards for use in specifying,simulating, and implementing electronic circuits, there was no active market for the exchange of electronic
43、designs. As interest in software reuse developed, the EDA industry began to share design collateral as ameans of controlling the cost of development and managing the timeline for completing their designprojects. Because that shared IP had a measurable development cost, business leaders began to insi
44、st onrecovering those costs through licensing to other potential uses. Technical measures for IP protection weredeveloped to augment the legal contracts that governed such shared use.As the means for technical protection of IP proliferated, there was increased pressure to incorporate thattechnology
45、in the existing standards for representation of IP. Expertise in protection technologies (such asencryption) was scarce in those standards development organizations (SDOs), which resulted in a slow paceof development within a given standard and technical divergence as independent organizations attem
46、pted tosolve similar problems. As the marketplace for IP exchange continued to mature, concerns about technicalprotection of IP extended to include an interest in defining and managing the scope of use for protected IP.This standard has been created to consolidate EDA industry efforts to unify the t
47、echnical protections for IPand to guide SDOs in aligning their work for interoperability and compatibility. It is also intended to sharebest practices in IP protection for those who use standards that incorporate such technology, such as VHDL(IEC 61691-1-1, IEEE Std 1076) and SystemVerilog (IEEE Std
48、 1800).aCorrections were made to 7.4.3 as required by IEEE Std 1735-2014/Cor 1-2015.aInformation on references can be found in Clause 2.This introduction is not part of IEEE Std 1735-2014, IEEE Recommended Practice for Encryption andManagement of Electronic Design Intellectual Property (IP).ixCopyri
49、ght 2015 IEEE. All rights reserved.Contents1. Overview 11.1 Scope 11.2 Purpose, value, and approach. 21.3 Key characteristics of this standard 21.4 Conventions used in this standard 31.5 Use of color in this standard. 31.6 Contents of this standard 42. Normative references. 53. Definitions, acronyms, and abbreviations 53.1 Definitions 53.2 Acronyms and abbreviations 74. Trust model 84.1 Stakeholders . 84.2 Role of IP protection 84.3 Protection via encryption . 94.4 Components of trust . 105. Interoperability. 125.1 Background 125.2 version pragma . 125.3 Basic interoper